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Daschle criticizes 'shameful' rider in DOI budget bill
Tuesday, November 4, 2003
The Senate voted easily on Monday to approve a $20 billion spending bill for the Department of Interior amid concerns over a provision that delays a court-ordered accounting of the Indian trust.
Although some Democrats spoke out against the measure, only Sens. Tom Daschle (D-S.D.), the minority leader, and Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) rejected the spending package. The roll call on the bill, which now goes onto President Bush for his signature, was 87-2. Eleven senators were not present
to vote.
The lack of controversy in the Senate contrasted with the
the House, where lawmakers mounted a campaign to
defeat the trust fund rider.
Despite impassioned pleas by several Indian Country
advocates, including Reps. Richard Pombo (R-Calif.),
J.D. Hayworth (R-Ariz.) and Dale Kildee (D-Mich.),
the bill was narrowly approved by a vote of 216-205.
Conrad Burns (R-Mont.), the chairman of the
Senate Interior Appropriations subcommittee, led debate
in the Senate.
He said the bill provided critical funds to the Bureau of
Indian Affairs (BIA) and the Indian Health Service
(IHS).
But he questioned whether an historical accounting of at least $13 billion
in Indian funds was a wise expenditure.
"We shouldn't spend that kind of money on an incredibly cumbersome
accounting that will do almost nothing to benefit the Indian people," he said.
He called the rider, which delays the accounting for a year,
a much needed "time-out" in the Cobell v. Norton case, which
was filed in 1996 and represents at least 500,000 individual
Indians.
Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-N.D.), the top Democrat on
the subcommittee, called the provision unconstitutional because
it tells the courts how to interpret federal law.
Yet he too said wasn't beneficial to spend the money
on the accounting when it could be used elsewhere.
"We've now had a court order," he said, "that apparently, if
followed to the letter, would require us to hire accountants from Maine to California
and do about $9 billion worth of work."
Daschle was the only senator to stand with the plaintiffs
in the case and the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI),
the largest inter-tribal organization.
"The court has ordered an accounting. This rider will undermine that order. It
will delay resolution and delay justice," he said. "What other group of Americans would we
dare to treat this way?"
"Why target American Indians?" he continued. "Many account holders are older people, elders
who have suffered extreme economic deprivation their entire lives. . .
This is shameful."
Despite concerns about resources going to Indian Country,
the bill does not provide significant increases to
Indian programs.
Once signed into law, BIA will receive about $2.9 billion while
IHS will get about $3 billion.
Earlier this year, Senate Republicans and some Democrats
voted down a Daschle amendment that would have
beefed up the IHS account by $2.9 billion. They also
rejected his bid to add $292 million to IHS by
putting a stop to a reorganization that tribal leaders
oppose.
On September 25, U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth
ordered the Department of Interior to conduct
an accounting of "all funds" in the Individual Indian
Money (IIM) trust.
At least $13 billion has passed through the system
since 1909 but the federal government can't ensure
that Indian beneficiaries received all of the money.
The Bush administration, in July 2002, estimated that
the accounting of the type of scale envisioned by
Lamberth would cost $2.4 billion and take up to
10 years.
Since the September ruling, officials bumped up the figure to
anywhere from $6 billion to $12 billion.
In January of this year, Secretary of Interior Gale
Norton released a scaled-back accounting plan that would
have cost $335 million over five years.
But it contained a significant number of limitations
that Lamberth rejected in his court decision.
Senate Roll Call:
the Conference Report (H.R. 2691 Conference Report )
(November 3, 2003)
DOI Budget Bill:
H.R.2691
DOI Conference Committee Report:
House
Report. 108-330 | PDF Version
Court Decisions:
Historical
Accounting | Fixing the
System | Structural
Injunction
Relevant Links:
Indian Trust: Cobell v. Norton - http://www.indiantrust.com
Cobell
v. Norton, Department of Justice - http://www.usdoj.gov/civil/cases/cobell/index.htm
Indian
Trust, Department of Interior - http://www.doi.gov/indiantrust
Related Stories:
Norton appealing
Indian trust fund ruling (11/3)
Norton says White House behind trust fund rider
(11/3)
House approves trust fund
rider in DOI bill (10/31)
Campbell
pushes action on trust fund suit (10/30)
Battle brews in House over DOI budget bill
(10/30)
Cobell rallies support for
trust fund case (10/28)
DOI bill
halts Indian trust fund case (10/24)
Bill targets Indian trust fund suit (10/22)
House chairman supports self-governance
rider (10/14)
Self-governance tribes
fear impact of reorganization (10/09)
Lamberth lays out future of Indian trust
reform (09/26)
Court report finds
undervaluation of Navajo lands (08/21)
Administration eyes consolidation of Indian
appraisals (08/15)
Tally
for private attorney fees in Cobell case rises (07/24)
Congress hacks Bush's accounting
funds (7/16)
Swimmer partly
right on trust fund rider (7/14)
Bush official balks at large
settlement for Cobell (7/10)
On trust, lawmakers take Bush
officials at face value (06/25)
Private attorneys reap benefits on
Cobell case (06/24)
Norton
offered settlement funds for IIM trust (6/20)
Lamberth criticizes interference
with trust fund case (05/22)
Bush administration turns to Congress on
trust (04/04)
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